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September 11, 2009
Eight years after the 9/11 attacks, Americans by a slight margin choose the Republican over the Democratic Party -- 49% vs. 42% -- as the party that will better protect the United States from terrorism and other threats. Democrats lead, 50% vs. ...
September 11, 2009
Americans are more likely to think the Republican Party will do a better job protecting the country from international terrorism and military threats than to think the Democratic Party will -- 49% to 42%.
September 2, 2009
The Democratic Party’s strength in party affiliation nationally has diminished over the course of the year, with its 17-point advantage over the Republicans in January (52% to 35%) shrinking to a 5-point edge in August (45% to 40%).
September 2, 2009
Six percent of Americans are white conservative Democrats, while 11% are white moderate/liberal Republicans. Nearly half of Americans (48%) fit into the more polarized, conventional categories of white moderate/liberal Democrats or white ...
September 2, 2009
Gallup Daily tracking data find that 6% of white Americans identify themselves as conservative Democrats and 11% identify themselves as moderate/liberal Republicans. Nearly half fit into the more conventional political categories of ...
August 14, 2009
Gallup Polls from the first half of 2009 find the District of Columbia to be the most liberal state in the country and Alabama to be the most conservative.
August 6, 2009
Compared to April, more Americans (35%) perceive that the tone and level of civility between Republicans and Democrats in Washington have gotten worse since Barack Obama was elected. Also, the public is divided as to whether Obama is making ...
August 3, 2009
Through June of 2009, the number of states with solid Democratic and solid Republican advantages in party identification remains unchanged from 2008. Aside from the District of Columbia, Massachusetts now ranks as the most Democratic state in ...
July 29, 2009
Gallup’s initial reading on the 2010 midterm elections shows registered voters favoring the Democratic candidate over the Republican by 50% to 44% on the generic congressional ballot. Given the typical differences in party turnout, the election ...
July 16, 2009
Republicans and those who lean Republican are currently most likely to name Mitt Romney (26%) as the person they would be most likely to support for president in 2012, with Sarah Palin following closely behind at 21%.

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